Topic
Tips on reducing time taken preparing/packing
Forum Posting
A Membership is required to post in the forums. Login or become a member to post in the member forums!
Home › Forums › General Forums › General Lightweight Backpacking Discussion › Tips on reducing time taken preparing/packing
- This topic is empty.
-
AuthorPosts
-
Sep 9, 2009 at 7:57 pm #1239207
I was wondering if anyone had any tips/tricks they use to minimize the time it takes to go from gear organized on the shelf to packed up in the car ready to go?
Thanks!
JustinSep 9, 2009 at 8:19 pm #1526398I store all cooking gear in plastic bin,,clothes and stuff sacks in plastic bin,shelter and sleep systems in another bin and have the 10 essentials ready to go in my pack..Food is the last thing I pack..Everybody has different systems but this one works for me..I can be ready to go on a hike in 30 minutes or less…Preparing for a hike is almost half the fun!!!!
Sep 9, 2009 at 8:22 pm #1526399Well, I just keep my base gear packed in my GoLite Jam at the bottom of my closet… ready to go on a moment's notice… just add food, fuel & water… ;-)
Sep 9, 2009 at 8:44 pm #1526412Usually, I backpack every week. My main strategy for reducing my packing time is to never unpack.
When I return from a trip, I dump everything out and separate what needs to be washed and all the food. I clean everything, then once it's clean I put it back in the pack instead of on a shelf. My tent/tarp, sleeping bag and pad are taken out, and aired out in the "gear pile". Usually my pack sits on the pad, the sleeping bag lofts next to it and my tarp is draped over it all.
For food, I essentially do the same thing. I take out my bear bag, clean what needs to be cleaned, then put all non-perishable food back in the bear bag and leave it on the pantry. Leaving the bear bag in the garage attracts cockroaches where I live. If i'm at the store and I see something I want to bring hiking, I put it directly in my bear bag when I get home. I usually also have multiple plastic bins where I keep my extra hiking food in. I try to force myself to take food from the bins instead of buying new food. Though usually it's food that I don't want to eat that is sitting in the bins.
The night before I leave for a hike I spend less than an hour, putting everything in stuff sack, efficiently packing my pack, getting my food bag together and making sure it's all there.
I recently lived in a house with five other fanatic hikers, pretty much everyone used this system as it's the fastest and keeps your stuff in a small pile. Obviously our garage was full of these piles and other assorted drying gear. One day I counted 26 backpacks in the garage!
This makes me want to go hiking!
Sep 9, 2009 at 10:36 pm #1526450I also keep my gear on shelves, organized in see-through plastic boxes. I use two gear lists and check off each item one by one:
Backpack gear list – everything I'm carrying/wearing on the trail – checked off the night before.
Supply/car camping box list – In a separate box, I keep everything for the road, extra supplies, comfort items, food and a complete separate shelter/sleep/kitchen setup for the night before I hit trail, after I've driven to the trailhead, often a long drive. (I've got an extra tent, bag, pad and stove) I like to keep my checked off backpack gear separate so I don't accidentally leave something critical out – easy to do when repacking at the chaos of the car trunk the morning I hit the trail, especially in messy weather.
Sep 14, 2009 at 7:31 am #1527438Good suggestions! I'm going add more plastic bins to my current storage system. Re-packing all the items that don't need to loft/dry will also save me some time. Thanks!
Sep 15, 2009 at 3:22 pm #1527847I also keep everything but my down Items packed in my pack and ready to go. I keep my down stuff in a plastic bin next to pack.
Before I pack I have my gear list handy to make sure I have everything there.
I always have a stock of food ready. Many of my trips are hatched in my head Friday at work. I come home, shower and pack, and am out the door within 20 minutes, and hitting the trail an hour later.
Sep 15, 2009 at 5:31 pm #1527881The best advice I could give you on reducing packing time is to know what you need and know how to pack it.
Besides the main categories (bag, pad, tent, clothes, food, water, cooking gear, rain gear, etc.), you also have the miscellaneous gear which is what I was always afraid of forgetting (thus I used to take forever when packing also). I have put a lot of thought into paring down my miscellaneous gear so it fits in a small ditty bag, which is where it always stays now. As long as I remember to bring it, I never find myself on the trail realizing I've forgotten some small essential item. For illustration, I'll list the items below.
Toothbrush/toothpaste, various fire starters (in plastic bag), spare compass, headlamp (plus a spare micro LED), first aid kit (bandaids, sterile/antibacterial wipes, nail clippers, tweezers), pencil and some paper, extra guy line (with mini carabiner at one end), water treatment, toilet paper and a small chamois towel
Sep 15, 2009 at 5:37 pm #1527884All my big gear that goes on most trips is in plain sight on a wall rack, my shelters are hanging elsewhere on a rack, and everything else lives in my "everything bag".
I grab a pack, bag, pad, jacket, and pants from the wall rack, select my shelter from my shelter rack, and toss the red everything bag into the pack.
Sep 15, 2009 at 6:00 pm #1527891What I find helps me out is my "48 HR Rule" after returning from a trip.
Within 48 hrs of returning from a trip, I have all my gear washed, cleaned, bottles of sunscreen, hand sanitizer, soap, etc…reloaded. Sleeping bags, bivy, tarptent, insulated clothing has been washed, aired out, and then stored properly (uncompressed).
Then I re-pack my backpack with everything except sleeping bag, water, food, bear vault/ur sack, and insulating layers.
That way, when I take a trip, I don't really have to worry about finding stuff and having come right back from a trip when I clean and re-pack, I am aware of what worked and did not work and try not to foget anything.
In my gear closet, I do have plastic boxes/bins that are clearly labeled with stove/kitchen stuff, tent stuff, food stuff, misc stuff.
So for anything that I need to use on an upcoming trip, they are easily available in one place…no wondering where I put something from the last trip or around the house.
-Tony
Sep 15, 2009 at 9:46 pm #1527945hello fellow bay area backpackers… seems like a lot of us pack the same
I keep everything packed except down items, food and clothes… the only "multi-use" non backpacking item is a headlamp… all extra gear that is not just for summer weekend get-aways, is in clear bins that are marked…
ready to go, just stop by safeway for salami and jameson ;)
Sep 16, 2009 at 12:26 am #1527972One strategy that is working well for me is to have camping specific items as much as I can…..items like toothpaste, toothbrush etc.
By having a specific toothbrush for hiking, you can keep it ready to go in your stuff sack with all your miscellaneous gear. The same goes for deoderant, tooth paste, contact lens solution etc. These are the things that tie you down as you're trying to get out the door because they're easy to forget otherwise and even if you do remember, you can't pack them until the last minute because you need them in your day to day life.
A lot of these things you replace anyways as you go ultralight, but still….the more hiking only gear you own the easier it is to have ready.
I store my stuff like this:
1) 'Essentials' Stuff Sack – Ton of Misc Items including spork, toothbrush, knife, bear bag rope, first aid etc. It's all in the sack and ready to go
2) Pack and Sleeping Quilt hanging in the closet right above the bin with my gear in it.
3) Clothes sack pre-loaded with socks, undies, xtra baselayer, rain gear. Just need to add my insulating layers because unfortunately I use these in my day to day life as well.
4) A few misc items I keep right in the hipbelt pockets in my pack like compass, water pills, knife etc. My platyBottles stay in the side pockets ready to be filled.
So when the time comes to hike, I stuff my quilt in the stuff sack, stuff that in my pack, drop in the essentials stuff sack, toss my insulating layers in the clothes sack and toss that in and then I'm ready to add consumables.
Consumables are probably the hardest part. Meal planning is a tough one….depending on how much you get out. I have a few favourite meals but often I need to just wander the grocery store for a while before each trip and that really wastes time. If I had pre-made dehydrated meals all ready to go that would save a ton of time.
Sep 16, 2009 at 12:31 am #1527974Another tip is to get all that gear that you never use out of the way. I have a huge stuff sack full of gear that I'm almost never ever going to use (ie. the 3 lbs flashlight I got for a present) and then another large stuff sack of stuff that I might use (ie. extra fuel canisters, different pots etc). Only my regular gear stays loose in the bin and even then it's normally packed ready to go in the proper stuff sack. My gear bin has my tent, my stuff sack full of all my small random gear, my stuff sack with clothes in it and then an empty stuff sack for my quilt. That's about it Everything else is packed away in these large stuff sacks. This makes it a lot easier to find that sleeping quilt stuff sack or whatever it is that you need.
Sep 16, 2009 at 8:03 am #1528022I use 3 different bins that are organized by how often I use the gear (e.g. every time, sometimes, rarely) I also have a stuff sack that holds the refills of all of my non food consumables (e.g. fire starters, sunscreen, alcohol pads) I find it helpful to keep them all together so I don't forget to refill.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Forum Posting
A Membership is required to post in the forums. Login or become a member to post in the member forums!
Our Community Posts are Moderated
Backpacking Light community posts are moderated and here to foster helpful and positive discussions about lightweight backpacking. Please be mindful of our values and boundaries and review our Community Guidelines prior to posting.
Get the Newsletter
Gear Research & Discovery Tools
- Browse our curated Gear Shop
- See the latest Gear Deals and Sales
- Our Recommendations
- Search for Gear on Sale with the Gear Finder
- Used Gear Swap
- Member Gear Reviews and BPL Gear Review Articles
- Browse by Gear Type or Brand.